I don't care much about cars either, but I have "fallen in love" with a couple of them.razmo wrote:XO: My mother actually HAS heard her music on my studio speakers... and yes, she says that she can hear a difference, but to her, it matters more that the speakers are places so that they look nice, no matter how silly they are placed (usually at different levels and near the roof! ... and I don't think she is the only consumer with this way of seeing things... it is probably to them what things that we don't pay attention is to us... I for an example has no whatsoever interest in cars... if I ever get a drivers license, I'd probably not care anything about the car, as long as it does it's job to my needs.... drive that is... though car enthusiasts would certainly shiver from my choice of car.... but do I care?... not really.... people are just different, and not everyone will find the same need for "resolution" be it cars, samples, pixels whatever.
I am an audio enthusiast though... I care for my music, and I want it to sound as perfect and good as I can possibly make it do, within my ears capabilities, and my wallet's not the least
Yep, it's important to a majority of users, or their female counterparts how things look, how big they are and, most importantly, how invisible they are.
Sure, I also value aesthetic looking things, I just like to put the horse before the cart; I don't think the horse likes to push the cart.
It's like going to a fancy restaurant every day, except it's at home and the chef is employed by you! (well, actually not quite, because I can't yet afford what I want).
I also care about image quality because I spend a lot of time reading on screens, and better DPI and more resolution means that is easier without anti-aliasing and sophisticated sub-pixel rendering algorithms. And it also makes things look more photo realistic, which I enjoy.
Similarly to music though, when I create synthetic images, I can apply compression (Dynamic Range reduction) by saturating the image and increasing contrast, as an artistic expression, but I still want my monitor to show the finest details of HDR photographs. (well, in the future...)